clack
/klæk/
noun
- A short, sharp sound like two hard objects hitting each other.
- The clack of her heels echoed in the empty hallway.
- The clack of the old typewriter keys filled the room.
- I heard the clack of the train wheels on the tracks.
- Lively, continuous talk; chatter.
- I couldn't concentrate with all the clack in the office.
- Their clack about the latest movie went on for hours.
- The clack of voices from the café spilled out onto the sidewalk.
Antonyms
verb
- To make a short, sharp sound, or to cause something to make such a sound.
- The wooden shutters clack against the window in the wind.
- The old fan clacks every time it turns.
- She clacked the knitting needles together as she worked.
- To talk rapidly and noisily; to chatter.
- He clacked on the phone for nearly an hour.
- The children clacked away about their day at school.
- They clacked and laughed at the back of the bus.